Recording our migration history
Posted: Thu Dec 22, 2016 6:59 am
Hello,
Just how many peoples of Asturian heritage are there living here in the states and territories? I would like to have some idea before checkout time. Just how someone would tally the numbers is difficult given that the US Census and Government do not recognize us as being of European Spanish heritage and a separate entity.
I found my way to the Forum by way of a magazine article. From that article, I now know that there are a few Asturians living in West Virginia besides me and my family that are related to the great migration of 1905 to 1920. I suspect that there are many more. Today, as Spanish people face deportation, getting governmental help and understanding of the problem of classification is going to be very problematic. When one considers that the city of St. Augustine was founded by Asturians on the principles of acceptance of all peoples and ethnicities, I wonder why there is so much rancor over migration? My loving parents gave us children this motto, live and let live.
My feeble and past attempt to write to our government for clarification became lost in the bureaucratic mess in Washington. I can just image that any future request before the 2020 Census will entail a huge horror story and the silence treatment. Despite what happens, I still would like to press on.
Why is this important to us? Should our unique and great history, culture, heritage, and contributions ever be displayed in the proposed Peoples History Museum, I would like for there to be a genealogical accounting preserved for each of our families, no matter when they migrated. Knowing how many and where they now live would be an important tool for any historian.
Manny
Just how many peoples of Asturian heritage are there living here in the states and territories? I would like to have some idea before checkout time. Just how someone would tally the numbers is difficult given that the US Census and Government do not recognize us as being of European Spanish heritage and a separate entity.
I found my way to the Forum by way of a magazine article. From that article, I now know that there are a few Asturians living in West Virginia besides me and my family that are related to the great migration of 1905 to 1920. I suspect that there are many more. Today, as Spanish people face deportation, getting governmental help and understanding of the problem of classification is going to be very problematic. When one considers that the city of St. Augustine was founded by Asturians on the principles of acceptance of all peoples and ethnicities, I wonder why there is so much rancor over migration? My loving parents gave us children this motto, live and let live.
My feeble and past attempt to write to our government for clarification became lost in the bureaucratic mess in Washington. I can just image that any future request before the 2020 Census will entail a huge horror story and the silence treatment. Despite what happens, I still would like to press on.
Why is this important to us? Should our unique and great history, culture, heritage, and contributions ever be displayed in the proposed Peoples History Museum, I would like for there to be a genealogical accounting preserved for each of our families, no matter when they migrated. Knowing how many and where they now live would be an important tool for any historian.
Manny